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  • Most countries recognize 18 as the start of adulthood

  • by granting various freedoms and privileges.

  • But is age the best way to measure maturity?

  • I was born 12:05 AM on November 6th

  • 5 minutes short of being eligible to vote in the election tomorrow.

  • Meanwhile, your big brotheryours truly

  • was born 15 minutes earlier, so I can vote.

  • It's arbitrary and unfair!

  • The voting age should be lowered to 16!

  • I firmly disagree!

  • No way 16-year-olds are mature enough to make decisions with national consequences.

  • I'm eligible and I don't even know who's running.

  • Meanwhile, I know the candidates inside and out.

  • She's obsessed with politics.

  • Exactly! If 16-year-olds aren't mature enough to vote,

  • then by that same logic, they shouldn't be allowed to drive.

  • I firmly disagree! I'm an excellent driver!

  • And I've never gotten a ticket, unlike some people.

  • That's so unfair! That stop sign was hidden by a tree.

  • I think you both make valid points.

  • And questioning the age limits of adulthood is well warranted.

  • Some countries have lowered the voting age to 16,

  • and cultural coming-of-age ceremonies are often celebrated at different ages.

  • As there seems to be no consensus on exactly when we reach maturity,

  • perhaps science can give us a clearer answer.

  • One way neuroscientists have looked to define adulthood

  • is by when the brain is fully grown.

  • Brain development involves two trajectories.

  • First, there's a reduction in gray matter.

  • Gray matter consists of cells and connections

  • that facilitate communication at short ranges,

  • creating dense, information-processing hubs.

  • While a reduction may seem like a bad thing,

  • what's happening is a selective pruning.

  • Connections that are used are kept and strengthened,

  • while under-used ones are weeded away,

  • creating a brain that is both fine-tuned to its environment and energy efficient.

  • This gray matter reduction coincides with an increase in white matter.

  • White matter refers to connections that are myelinated,

  • coated in a layer of insulation,

  • allowing for fast far-range communication between information hubs.

  • For example, these paths connect regions that signal

  • the pleasure of immediate reward with regions that help us plan ahead,

  • allowing us to make more balanced, forward-thinking decisions.

  • Imaging studies show that white and gray matter volumes

  • undergo drastic changes during adolescence,

  • and continuing through your twenties.

  • But the brain's journey is far from finished,

  • as various experiences continue to reshape its connections

  • throughout your lifetime.

  • So brain structure alone may not give us our answer.

  • Another way scientists have tried to define adulthood

  • is by measuring cognitive development

  • when are you able to learn and complete mental tasks

  • at the same efficiency as older adults?

  • By this definition, adulthood may begin as early as 16,

  • as teens perform just as well on tests

  • that assess reasoning, problem-solving and critical thinking.

  • Though capable of making smart, well-informed decisions,

  • teens may be more susceptible to external pressures.

  • Studies show that when performing risk- taking and self-control related tasks,

  • 18 to 21 year olds behave much like older adults.

  • But when these tests include an emotional element

  • such as utilizing self-control when identifying fearful faces

  • or a social element

  • such as making a decision in the presence of a friend

  • different patterns emerge.

  • Under these influences, 18 to 21 year olds tend to behave more like younger teens,

  • and their brains show younger-teen-like patterns of activity.

  • In other words, during your teens and early twenties,

  • your brain is wired to place more value and attention

  • on social and emotional elements.

  • This allows emerging adults to better explore their identities

  • and connect with others,

  • but may also create more vulnerability to negative peer influence

  • and rash heat of the moment decisions.

  • For this reason, many scientists argue that judicial systems

  • should expand juvenile courts to include

  • those in their late teens and early twenties,

  • as current systems fail to recognize

  • how the emerging adult brain is still changing.

  • So when are you actually an adult?

  • As you can see, there is no exact age or moment

  • in development that we can point to.

  • Instead, neuroscience suggests that there are waves of maturity.

  • As different brain regions and mental abilities mature at different times,

  • so do different adult-like states and behaviors.

  • Not everyone will reach each wave of maturity at the same age.

  • Each person's journey to adulthood is unique,

  • influenced by genetics, environment, and experience.

Most countries recognize 18 as the start of adulthood

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When are you actually an adult? - Shannon Odell

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2022 年 12 月 12 日
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